How ABA works

How ABA works with speech therapy, OT, and your child’s school

Yes, a child can do ABA, speech, and occupational therapy at once. Good coordination keeps each provider in their lane and aimed at the same goals.

A team of therapists and a parent meeting around a table
One team, clear lanes

Coordination means providers share goals and stay within their own scope.

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Yes. Children commonly do ABA, speech, and occupational therapy at the same time. The job of good coordination is to keep each professional in their lane and make sure everyone aims at the same goals. A BCBA handles behavior and skill-building, a speech-language pathologist handles communication and AAC, and an occupational therapist handles sensory and motor needs. Most therapists serve kids who also see other providers, and working together is the expected standard (ASHA autism guidance). At Budding Futures, we reach out to your child’s other providers, with your written consent, and we stay in our lane.

Parents tell us the worst part is providers who never talk to each other. We do the opposite. Our BCBAs, led by Rachel Blackburn, BCBA, share our goals with your child’s speech therapist, OT, and school team, ask for theirs, and leave their work to them. Our ethics code requires us to practice only within our scope and to collaborate (BACB Ethics Code).

Can my child do ABA, speech, and OT at the same time?

Yes, and many do. Done right, they reinforce each other: the speech therapist sets a communication target, and ABA helps your child use it across the whole day. The risk is not doing all three. It is doing them without anyone coordinating.

Who does what: BCBA, SLP, OT, school, and pediatrician

ProviderMain focusWho deliversStays out of
BCBA (ABA)Behavior, skill-building, generalizationBCBA and RBTDiagnosing, choosing AAC, sensory therapy
Speech (SLP)Communication, language, AAC, feedingSpeech-language pathologistRunning the behavior plan
OTSensory, motor, and daily-living skillsOccupational therapistSpeech and language targets
School teamEducational access and IEP goalsTeachers and special education staffMedical treatment
PediatricianDiagnosis, medical home, referralsMD or DOHands-on therapy

How does ABA support communication and AAC without replacing the SLP?

The speech-language pathologist owns communication and picks the AAC device. ABA reinforces using it, every chance across the day. We do not choose the device or write speech goals, because that is the SLP’s job (ASHA). Here is how ABA and speech therapy compare.

How does ABA work alongside OT on sensory and motor goals?

The occupational therapist designs the sensory and motor plan, like a sensory diet. We build those accommodations into our sessions, but we do not prescribe sensory therapy (AOTA). If your child needs a movement break to focus, we use it; the OT decides what it should be.

How do we build shared goals across providers?

With your consent, we share our plan, ask for everyone else’s, and agree on consistent cues and language. Then we sort out who leads on what. The goal is one clear message to your child, not three different ones pulling in different directions.

How do providers share information without breaking privacy?

You are the gatekeeper. Providers can only share your child’s information with your written consent, called a release of information, and schools need written consent too (FERPA). We lead with consent first, always. Nothing about your child gets shared because we felt like it.

How does coordination work with your child's school and IEP?

School speech and OT are “related services” under federal law, meant to help your child learn (IDEA, 34 CFR 300.34). A medical autism diagnosis and a school’s educational eligibility are not the same thing, which trips up a lot of families. As an in-home provider, we can line up our goals with the IEP team. More on school collaboration.

What if two providers give conflicting recommendations?

It happens, and it is stressful. Our ethics code tells us to work it out by compromising and putting your child first (BACB Ethics Code). We will not speak for another profession. We will bring everyone to the same table and find the plan that serves your child.

Common questions about FBAs

Who should I contact first: a BCBA, SLP, or OT?

Start with your pediatrician, who can point you to the right evaluations. Many families begin ABA and speech together after an autism diagnosis.

Do ABA and OT overlap?

They can, on things like daily-living skills. Coordination keeps them from working against each other, with the OT leading on sensory and motor.

Is it too many appointments?

It can feel like a lot. A coordinated team and an in-home option cut down on travel and on conflicting demands.

Does my child need all three?

Not always. The right mix depends on your child. A good team will tell you honestly what is needed and what is not.

Want a team that actually talks to each other?

Our Colorado BCBAs coordinate with your child's speech therapist, OT, and school team, with your consent. We verify your Medicaid or insurance first.

Call (720) 613-8837